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Minimum Accelerometer Wear Time in Infants: A Generalizability Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how long and how many days infants need to wear accelerometers to accurately measure their physical activity levels for evaluating interventions to prevent rapid weight gain.
  • Researchers used data from 23 infants, monitoring them for 7 days, and found that at least 2 days and 12 hours of data collection at the ankle yielded reliable results.
  • The findings suggest that monitoring infants with accelerometers for at least 3 days, covering all daytime hours, is effective for obtaining dependable measurements of their physical activity.

Article Abstract

Background: Research measuring physical activity behaviors during infancy is critical for evaluation of early intervention efforts to reduce rapid weight gain. There is little known about the physical activity patterns of infants, due in part to limited evidence for measurement procedures. This study sought to determine the minimal number of days and hours of accelerometry needed to reliably measure daily physical activity in infants using Generalizability (G) theory.

Methods: A total of 23 infants (14 female, 9 male) wore an accelerometer on the right ankle and right wrist for 7 days. Data were manually cleaned to remove activity counts not produced by the infant. G theory analyses were conducted on the average counts per epoch.

Results: Reliable estimates were observed with at least 2 days (G & Φ = .910) and 12 hours (G = .806, Φ = .803) at the ankle, and with at least 3 days (G & Φ = .906) and 15 hours (G = .802, Φ = .800) at the wrist.

Conclusions: These results provide some of the first guidelines for objective physical activity measurement during infancy. Accelerometer monitoring periods of at least 3 days including all daytime hours appear to be sufficient for reliable measurement.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jpah.2016-0395DOI Listing

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